Pubdate: Tue, 17 May 2011 Source: Abbotsford Times (CN BC) Copyright: 2011 The Abbotsford Times Contact: http://www.abbotsfordtimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1009 Author: Jon Ferry, Writer, Vancouver Province Newspaper. RCMP 'USED AS A POLITICAL TOOL' Most Lower Mainland residents will agree that marijuana grow-ops, and the ugly behaviour they spawn, are a blight on their community. They also know our supposed justice system is woefully weak-kneed when it comes to nailing druggies. But that doesn't excuse the Big Brother way in which Mission district city hall has been stepping clumsily into the breach. Mission's anti-grow-op strategy, in which it dinged homeowners who had outsized hydro bills thousands of dollars in inspection fees, was fundamentally flawed -- as the B.C. Civil Liberties Association and others pointed out. Now, the district has compounded that public relations fiasco by calling in the Mounties to hound those allegedly involved in leaking embarrassing information about that strategy from secret council meetings. The RCMP won't say exactly why they had to seize two computers from blind Mission district Coun. Jenny Stevens and three others from former councillor Ron Taylor. But it's pretty clear the "breach of trust" probe stemmed from vocal opposition by Taylor and Stevens to the discredited inspection initiative. No one likes a tattletale. And it's obvious Mission Mayor James Atebe and others at city hall are unhappy about the way their money-spinning anti-grow-op approach has backfired, only months from the civic elections. So it's understandable that they would want to get back at those they suspect of ratting them out to the media. "The RCMP are being used as a political tool," Taylor told me Thursday. And, in the absence of contrary information, I agree. The fact is, as Taylor pointed out earlier to Province reporter Susan Lazaruk, Mission council "leaks like a sieve." And as the civil liberties association noted, there are frequent allegations that Mission and other metro municipalities are misusing in-camera meetings intended for sensitive personnel, legal and real-estate matters to discuss topics they don't want to debate in public. I couldn't reach Atebe Thursday. But the current controversy reminds me of the foofaraw at Vancouver City Hall in the fall of 2008 over a humongous leak about the sorry state of financing for the Olympic Village housing project. The police were called in, not because the media leak was inaccurate, but because the ruling Non-Partisan Association was livid with the way the information was, well, killing its re-election chances. Predictably, once the new Vision Vancouver-dominated council was sworn in, the police probe went nowhere, as did a costly investigation by top lawyer Richard Peck. And all those howls of outrage by aggrieved councillors glossed over the key issue -- namely that, as far as the public was concerned, a leak was badly needed. For too long, council had kept ratepayers in the dark. Besides, as I said then, this is the Internet age. Everything gets leaked. Key decisions are no longer the exclusive preserve of a cabal of bullying good ol' boys. We do not live in a police state. And persecutions of those who may have fed, or been fed, juicy tidbits from secret council discussions are as distasteful as they are counter-productive. We need fewer in-camera discussions, more watchdogs of councils' activities . . . and a far better-informed electorate. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.